Knowledge in a sentence as a noun

Just the fear of the knowledge that one is being comprehensively watched, and what "they" might have.

You have an intimate knowledge of Lebesgue measure.

" I had done a lot to develop my talents and knowledge base, and in a range of areas to boot.

I thought this is basic knowledge of everyone technically engaged in Internet stuff.

HTP told Linode to just publicly acknowledge that HTP was the group that broke into Linode, and they'd delete the sensitive info.

" The general form of the problem seems to be a blindness to the depths of domain knowledge required to be effective in other disciplines.

Wow, you think, these assholes mathematicians are really trying to keep their knowledge in an ivory tower of obscurity.

He's been a tireless advocate for dismantling privelege and setting knowledge free for several decades.

I mean, if you can't answer basic questions about your knowledge in a one-on-one conversation, then that's a real problem, and not just in interviewing.

Otherwise, the other two founders will hold all the power in the organization because they, and they alone, hold that special knowledge of what investors want.

You are missing out on a treasure trove of knowledge humanity has collated over centuries, just to hack away and reinvent the wheel by yourself...well, good luck with that.

Thus, evidence that an individual participated in the alleged violations or even had knowledge of them is not necessary.

For a person associated with a publication I would expect a much higher level of knowledge of things like 'how to cite' and 'how to attribute' and maybe a dash of copyright 101.

Think about that: criminal penalties for violations of laws that "won't be that easy for people to follow", where knowledge or participation in the alleged violations is not necessary.

This posed a bit of a problem for HTP: if it became public knowledge that they had obtained access to Linode, then perhaps they wouldn't have time to go after the impersonators using their newfound access to SwiftIRC.

The results echoed in the western world at the highest levels for no less than two centuries, culminating in a famous 1911 edition that was widely regarded as the pinnacle in assembled human knowledge to that time - something to be marveled at.

Wow, I wasn't expecting my email to Jeff to end up as a front-page blog post!The point here is that Markdown doesn't have a spec, nor do any of its variants to my knowledge, so I was proposing to come up with some Markdown-like language that does have a spec.

It is easy to disparage the Encyclopedia Britannica from a modern perspective - out-of-step, overpriced, outmaneuvered by competitors - but there is a great sadness here at the demise of something that represented an effort by western scholars to "capture the world's knowledge.

Quite often though industry biases will engage and they'll be put on duty keeping some legacy system alive because their deep knowledge of the system lets the company put 1 guy maintaining half a million lines of code in perpetuity vs. 10 young guys maintaining the same, who all wanting to leave after a few years to build more skills.

Knowledge definitions

noun

the psychological result of perception and learning and reasoning

See also: cognition noesis